Shoe tightening system

a shoe tightening and shoe technology, applied in the field of shoes, can solve the problems of uneven distribution of pressure from the tightening, difficulty in adjusting the lace tightness, and pressure points where the buckle or clamp exists

Inactive Publication Date: 2005-08-02
DASHAMERICA
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

[0007]To attain the advantages and in accordance with the present invention, a tightening system for a shoe is provided. The shoe comprises a sole and an upper. The upper is formed of at least a toe box, a throat, and a heel. The tightening system comprises a canopy having a fixed end and a free end. A slit in the free end extends internal to a body of the canopy forming a number of lobes. A lace runs from a tightening apparatus to the lobes allowing the canopy to be tightened on the foot of a user.
[0008]The present invention further provides a shoe with a tightening system. The shoe comprises a sole and an upper coupled to the sole. The upper comprises a toe box, a throat, and a heel. Traversing the throat is a throat cover. Traversing the throat cover is a canopy that is fixed to the upper on a fixed end and is not fixed to the upper on a free end. A lace is attached to a tightening apparatus and the free end of the canopy such that using the tightening apparatus to tighten the laces causes the canopy to tighten the shoe on the foot of a user.

Problems solved by technology

Manual lace tightening has many drawbacks including, for example, difficulty in adjusting the lace tightness and uneven distribution of pressure from the tightening.
Buckle and clamp style systems, while quicker than manual lace tightening, cause pressure points where the buckles or clamps exist.
These pressure points cause localized hot spots and irritation, which can lead to blisters and the like.
VELCRO® straps can be used in place of buckles and / or laces, but they suffer many of the drawbacks of buckles in they produce localized pressure points and uneven tightness distribution.
The result is localized pressure points and hotspots that can irritate the foot.
These straps, however, have fixed fastening locations that cause localized pressure points, hotspots, and irritation to the user's foot.
While it would be desirous to incorporate the lacing system disclosed by the Hammerslag Patents into conventional cycling shoes, it has been discovered that incorporating the Hammerslag Patents as disclosed into cycling shoes causes localized hotspots, pressure points, and buckling in canopy 114.

Method used

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Examples

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Embodiment Construction

[0015]The present invention will be described with reference to FIGS. 2-4. While the present invention is shown and described with regard to a cycling shoe, one of ordinary skill in the art would recognize on reading the disclosure that alternative shoes styles could use the invention described herein, and the use of a cycling shoe is exemplary and non-limiting.

[0016]FIG. 2 shows an elevation view of a cycling shoe 200. Cycling shoe 200 includes a sole 202 with lugs 204 attached to sole 202 and an upper 206 attached to the sole. Lugs 204 are optional. Upper 206 comprises a toe box 208, a throat covering 210 covering the throat opening, a heel 212, and a canopy 214 (which partially obscures throat cover 210). Throat cover 210 could be replaced with a tongue and opening similar to conventional shoes, but the bunching of the tongue and upper may cause irritation. Further, throat cover 210 optionally could be removed and canopy 214 could be stitched directly to upper 206, but it is beli...

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PUM

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Abstract

The present invention relates to a shoe having a canopy and laterally mounted tightening apparatus. The canopy has a fixed end attached to the shoe and a free end not attached to the shoe. The free end of the canopy has lobes (or the canopy is a plurality of straps) that are moveable relatively independently of each other such that a lace attached to a tightening apparatus and the free end of the canopy tightens the shoe allowing the free ends of the canopy to facilitate the canopy molding the foot of the user.

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION[0001]The present invention relates to shoes and, more particularly, to a sport shoe tightening system.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0002]There exist many mechanisms for tightening shoes, boots, skates, and other footwear. Conventional mechanisms for tightening footwear range from simple manual lace tightening to more complex buckles or clamps and the like. Manual lace tightening has many drawbacks including, for example, difficulty in adjusting the lace tightness and uneven distribution of pressure from the tightening. Buckle and clamp style systems, while quicker than manual lace tightening, cause pressure points where the buckles or clamps exist. These pressure points cause localized hot spots and irritation, which can lead to blisters and the like.[0003]VELCRO® straps can be used in place of buckles and / or laces, but they suffer many of the drawbacks of buckles in they produce localized pressure points and uneven tightness distribution. Further, the straps ar...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Patents(United States)
IPC IPC(8): A43C1/00A43C11/16A43C11/00A43C1/04A43B5/14A43B5/00
CPCA43B5/14A43C1/04A43C11/16A43C11/165
Inventor KERNS, MARKKING, CHRISTOPHER J.SULLIVAN, SEAN
Owner DASHAMERICA
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